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More from AIDS confab
Mural to be removed
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Meet Travis Wall
The
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Serving the gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender communities since 1971
Vol. 42 • No. 32 • August 9-15, 2012
Drag is out at Holy Redeemer
Baldwin receives Bay Area boost in Senate bid
by Chuck Colbert
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by Matthew S. Bajko
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he primary to decide her Republican opponent for a U.S. Senate seat is less than a week away, but lesbian Congresswoman Tammy Baldwin (D-Wisconsin) is already being Bill Wilson pummeled with atTammy Baldwin tack ads paid for by outside groups. Polls in the race to succeed Democratic Senator Herb Kohl, who opted to retire from Congress this year, have consistently shown Baldwin either in a dead heat or with a slight See page 12 >>
Rick Gerharter
Bingo in the (almost) buff N
ovice Sister Yoda, right, keeps a close eye on players at the Bear Necessities bingo event as part of Lazy Bear Weekend in Guerneville on the Russian River Saturday, August 4. The Russian River Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence hold the
special event to complement their monthly bingo evenings throughout the year. Lazy Bear bingo debuted in 2003 and has become one of the most popular, and fun, events of the weekend, which also included pool parties and entertainment.
local gay recovery group will not be holding its annual fall fundraiser in the social hall of the Castro neighborhood’s Most Holy Redeemer Catholic Church after officials said that no drag queens would Father be allowed. Brian Costello For the past couple of years the Castro Country Club has held its event in the church’s social hall and had drag queens as entertainment. As a statement issued by the country club’s board of directors explained, the new no-dragqueen policy at the church is simply unacceptable. “The Castro Country Club had planned to hold our third annual Harvest Feast on October 20, 2012, at Most Holy Redeemer Church, where we have held this and other events in the past,” the directors said in a statement. See page 12 >>
Minority journalist conference welcomes gay group by Matthew S. Bajko
L Rick Gerharter
Jack Fertig speaking at a 9/11 memorial in 2010.
Jack Fertig, pioneering Sister, dies by Liz Highleyman
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ack Fertig – a longtime gay Bay Area activist, spiritual devotee, and one of the first Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence – died Sunday evening, August 5. He was 57. Mr. Fertig had entered hospice care due to liver cancer and died at home with his partner, Elias Trevino, and other family at his side. Though he went by several names over the years, Mr. Fertig was best known to many See page 11 >>
GBT individuals have attended the quadrennial Unity confabs held by minority journalist groups for decades. This year marked the first time that they helped organize it. After the National Association of Black Journalists voted in 2011 to end its relationship with Unity over a dispute about finances and governance, the remaining groups invited the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association to become a member and help plan the 2012 conference, which took place last week in Las Vegas. It had been a longtime goal of founding NLGJA member Leroy “Roy” Aarons, a former editor at the Oakland Tribune who died in 2004, for the group to join Unity. But Aaron’s entreaties were always rebuffed. That changed last summer when NLGJA’s board voted to unite with the National Association of Hispanic Journalists, the Asian American Journalists Association, and the Native American Journalists Association to present the four-day convention that drew more than 2,000 media professionals to Sin City. The inclusion of NLGJA at Unity was largely celebrated during the event. The majority of attendees were more focused on landing a job offer or meeting new contacts than on whether the LGBT journalists belonged at the convention.
Bach Polakowski
Outgoing NLGJA president David Steinberg talked with incoming president Michael Triplett at the Unity convention last week in Las Vegas
Sharif Durhams, a member of both NABJ and NLGJA, on whose national board he serves, has attended the last three consecutive Unity conventions. He said attendees this year had been “incredibly welcoming” of the gay journalist group. “People have been curious about our organization and the benefits we bring our members,” said Durhams, the social media editor at the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. “I hope members of NLGJA see the similarities in the discrimination some of these other minority groups face.” Durhams added that he hoped NLGJA’s inclusion in Unity would result in discussions about race and sexual orientation as it relates to the news media. “I also hope our members get asked challenging questions. There is homophobia in communities of color just as there is racism in the gay community. I hope we are challenging each other to explore those issues,” said Durhams.
Ongoing debate “I think it has largely been supportive,” said NLGJA national board secretary Ken Miguel, a segment producer for ABC7 in San Francisco, when asked to describe NLGJA’s reception at Unity. “I think it has given us a bigger platform to share our collective vision on fairness and accuracy in coverage.”
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The August 1 opening plenary, in fact, zeroed in on those topics as the discussion about covering race and LGBT issues turned to the ongoing debate over expanding Unity’s membership to include LGBT people and dropping “Journalists of Color” from its name. See page 13 >>